Monday, September 29, 2014

Our acclaimed Heart of the West Adventure Route -- the easy solution to the challenges of planning and completing a complex wildland-motoring trip -- has been revised, updated and expanded to bebetter than ever for 2015!

America's premierself-directedoverland motor route extends deeper into the wilds of the Great Basin, one of the most remote and unpeopled regions in the Lower 48.

There are longer, more-remote stretches of the historic Oregon Trail. Lonely two-tracks traverse multihued badlands. And stretches of state and county roads have been replaced with alluring wildland backways that highway travelers miss.

And for those who like maps as well as GPS guidance, the complete H.o.W. package for 2015 includes:

Perhaps best of all: Our continuing explorations have led to a number of rewarding, field-tested options that let travelers shorten and adapt the full, 2,800-mile (4,500 km) loopto accommodate limited itineraries. So whether you have a long weekend, a week or two full weeks, Heart of the West ADV Route can easily be tailored to fit your schedule. Did you ever imagine adventure motoring could be this accessible?

An American odyssey of unprecedented scope,Heart of the West Adventure Route -- previously named Forever West -- immerses adventure travelers in the landscapes of six states:

Monday, August 25, 2014

Having difficulty planning yourbackcountry-travel adventure?No time for research? Don't have the resources, geographic knowledge or expertise to plan a truly unique vacation?

At Backcountry Byways LLC, we do the research. We have the resources and knowledge. And we can do the work for you ...so you can live the dream!

Explore wild California ... in your SUV!

Tap into our expertise, earned through decades of experience chronicling the unpaved and often historic wildland roads of the American West. Since 1993, we've been actively documenting Western backroads for our Backcountry Bywaysguidebook series,as well as National Geographic Adventure, other magazines and publications, and corporate and individual clients.

Every adventure-motoring season, we take the work and the worry out of planning unique wildland routes -- thoroughly, accurately and professionally -- for individuals, couples, travel groups, even families. We can do it for you, too!

This could be you ... in Utah!

Continual field research, the latest maps and GPS-based resources, consultations with public-lands agencies ... we apply these tools to all of our work. On-the-ground verification helps assure that the routes and trips we develop are appropriate and accurate.

Contemporary digital technologies as Google Earth and Garmin's BaseCamp to help assure that our GPS-based service is up to date.

Monday, January 20, 2014

At Backcountry Byways LLC, we are often asked what maps we rely on to develop personalized travel routes for clients who prefer to explore the wilds of the American West on their own--without the expense and limitations of a hand-holding guided tour.Without divulging too many secrets, here are some tools we use and recommend.

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Benchmark Road & Receation atlases: This series, focused on Western states, is an indispensable tool and the best of the atlas genre. Each page of shaded-relief cartography illustrates primitive two-track roads (faint red hairlines), primitive high-clearance or 4x4 roads (orange-hued dashed lines), and unpaved roads (dark red dashed lines). Landmarks abound, both natural and man-made, as do place names and countless other details. We have found that the faint hairline roads often are better than their designation suggests, and thus often are suitable for adventure motoring.

Monday, January 21, 2013

The following tour description is from my guidebook Washington Byways. The 56-route guide details non-technical backcountry roads for adventure motorcyclists and SUV-borne travelers. The book is available now as a convenient PDF ... for just USD$18.95! To get your copy,contact us at:backcountrybyways at gmail dot com. It's a 25mb-plus file, so you will need either Dropbox or Google Drive--both free to download--to transfer it.

HIGHLIGHTS With its wildflowers and views of the Olympic Mountains, particularly glacier-capped 7,965-foot Mt. Olympus and the park’s deep river valleys, this short, narrow and winding ridgeline road packs a powerful scenic punch as it climbs to 6,150 feet. It runs both just below and on top of Hurricane Ridge (named for the winds that blow in winter), and ends above tree line at the base of 6,450-foot Obstruction Peak. The parking area at the end of the road is the trailhead for a number of day hikes, including the steep, 7.6-mile (one way) Grand Ridge Trail to Deer Park (Tour 3 in Washington Byways).

DIFFICULTYEasy, on a good high-clearance, native-surface road. The park tries to have the road open by July 4, depending on weather and the previous winter’s snowpack. It is generally closed to overnight parking in early October. It is closed altogether by the end of October. It is also closed whenever snow, which can occur anytime, makes driving hazardous. This is a busy road on sunny summer weekends, and the parking area at the end fills up fast. So consider going on a weekday if you can, or going early in the day.

TIME & DISTANCE 1 hour; 15.6 miles round-trip. But this is a great day-hiking and sightseeing destination, so plan on spending considerably more time.

Monday, January 7, 2013

For folks who live in or are thinking of visiting the Lone Star State, our friends in the cartography division at AAA affiliate Automobile Club of Southern California have just added to their catalog of folded paper maps the first edition of "Big Bend Region."

As always, it includes mileages between junctions, to the tenth of a mile, as well as useful information about the region.

The map will be available at ACSC/AAA travel stores throughout Texas. ACSC also includes Southern California, Hawaii, New Mexico, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi, Alabama, southern Illinois and Indiana, northern New England, and the Tidewater region of Virginia. So if you live in one of those areas and are thinking of exploring this part of Texas, inquire locally for the map (free to members; USD$4.95 to non-members at AAA offices that sell AAA publications to non-members), although they may or may not have it in stock.Check availability with the AAA office in El Paso, 5867 Mesa Drive, Suite A; (915) 778-9521.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

In gearing up in August 2012 for the inaugural motorcycle ride of Touratech-USA's new 710-mile (1,127 km) Colorado Backcountry Discovery Route, we decided to try something new for storage: a waist pack in place of our KLR 650's tank bag. In the process,we ended up discovering an innovative, modular system for carrying gear that may work well for ADV riders, and riders with more than one bike.

R3 waist pack

A tank bag can interferewith standing on the foot pegs and leaning forward while riding in rough terrain. That wouldn't do for seven days adventuring with TT-USA's COBDR scouting team. A waist pack seemed a practical alternativefor the small items we all typically like to have handy in tank bags.Our search turned up Britain's Kriegaline of soft motorcycle bags, including its waist packs. The brand was new to us, and we were impressed by the user comments and reviews. Specifications for Kriega's R-3 waist pack (USD$89) made it seem ideal.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

The following tour description is a sample from my guidebook Colorado Byways, which I researched in a stock Toyota 4Runner.The 80-route guide details non-technical backcountry tours suitable to adventure motorcyclists and SUV-borne travelers. Best of all ... it's coming soon as a PDF for just USD$18.95!To be notified as soon as it's available, send us a note today at backcountrybyways at gmail dot com.

LOCATIONBetween Ouray and Telluride, in the San Juan Mountains. Uncompahgre National Forest. Ouray and San Miguel counties. Google Map

G Wagens on Imogene Pass

HIGHLIGHTSThis is one of Colorado’s most famous and scenic 4WD routes, with some of the best alpine scenery in the state. Named for a prospector’s wife, 13,114-foot Imogene Pass [N37°55.910′ W107°44.127′] links two old mining towns that now rank high on tourists’ itineraries. The views of Telluride, Black Bear Pass (Tour 55 in Colorado Byways), Ingram Falls and Bridal Veil Falls are inspiring indeed. And the wildflowers are beautiful. But don’t pick them, so that other visitors can enjoy them as well. The Tomboy mine and town site, 3,000 feet above Telluride, are interesting. You can combine this tour with Yankee Boy Basin (Tour 52), which is particularly famous for wildflowers.

DIFFICULTYModerate. Rocky with stretches of narrow shelf road and drop-offs. It’s busy, as well, so remember that uphill traffic has the right of way. The road is usually open by July 4.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

PARTING OF THE WAYS, Wyoming, USA – Alone in the heart of nowhere, I imagined the farewells among 19th-century pioneers who, after surviving a thousand miles or more together, knew they might never see each other again after leaving this fork in the emigrant trail.

Oregon Trail, Wyoming

At The Parting of the Ways, not far off Wyoming Highway 28 northeast of Farson, hundreds of thousands of emigrants on the California-Oregon Trail faced a critical choice on their journey west: They could follow the longer but better-watered left branch (as two-thirds of them did), or take the shorter but waterless right branch, the Sublette Cutoff.

It was decision that could, and probably did in some cases, affect the outcome of their journeys.So I found it a place of poignant history, one worth including in our Heart of the West Adventure Route (previously, Forever West), a 2,800-mile (4,500-km) backcountry-motoring route we originally developed for adventure motorcyclists from the eastern USA. The route also is ideal for off-highway-capable four-wheeled vehicles.

Monday, June 25, 2012

The following tour description is a sample from my guidebookCalifornia Coastal Byways, which I researched in a Toyota 4Runner, Toyota Land Cruiserand Lexus LX450.The guide details non-technical backcountry tours suitable to adventure motorcyclistsand SUV-borne travelers. For information about the book, contactWilderness Press@ 1-800- 443-7227. If you are unable to acquire a copy at a reasonable price, contact me at: backcountrybyways@gmail.com.

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For a more complete sense of what it's like to explore Big Sur, read my magazine feature, Backroading the 'Big South', published in Road & Trackmagazine's spinoff, Open Road.

HIGHLIGHTSPrepare for an enchanting drive through a misty coastal forest complete with
redwood groves, mossy riparian woodlands, ferns and gurgling brooks. Poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti had a cabin in Bixby Canyon that was frequented by
Beat Generation writers in the late 1950s, including Jack Kerouac, who
described his visits in his 1962 novel Big Sur. This is a peaceful and
beautiful alternative, if only for a short distance, to the traffic on Highway 1.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

MACKAY, Idaho -- As usual, the first long weekend of vacation season brought two days of steady rain, even snow in the mountains of eastern Idaho. So when Memorial Day itself dawned partly cloudy, I thought that a long highway ride west across the Snake River Plain to the mountains of central Idaho was better than nothing.It turned out be an exhilarating spring day of Rocky Mountain riding.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

GREEN RIVER, Utah -- I recently did what most travelers wouldn't do when spring arrives in canyon country: spend a week based at this forlorn hamlet, which barely clings to life in the shadow of Moab, the outdoor-recreation mecca just 50 miles away.

Touratech USA's Utah Backcountry Discovery Route

There are reasons to bypass this quasi-ghost town. Although there are some remodeled and contemporary lodgings, Main Street is lined with the dilapidated hulks of abandoned motels, vacant lots and derelict gas stations. Instead of Moab's brew pubs, mountain-bike shops and espresso bars, there are boarded-up bars and bygone cafes.These are ghosts of the era when old U.S. 50 -- not nearby Interstate 70 -- was a major cross-country route, and the Cold War search for uranium brought a level of prosperity but left the region pocked with abandoned mines that still pose hazards today.With all of its warts and woes, Green River appeals to me. It is authentic Utah, and there are reasons -- access to gorgeous backcountry roads, spectacular sandstone canyons and ancient rock art -- to make Green River a destination, and to stay for a while.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Note: To learn more about adventure driving in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, as well as Capitol Reef National Park, pick up a copy of my guidebook, Utah Byways. This post includes videos and a Google map.ESCALANTE, Utah -- I may be done with touristy Moab, for there is something alluring about bypassed, overlooked, sometimes remote and often underappreciated portals to Utah's canyon country like Green River, Hanksville, Boulder and Escalante.

Table with a view at Kiva Koffeehouse & Kottage

To my traveled eye, these hamlets remain authentically Utah: rooted in the lore of Mormon pioneers; minimally or not at all commercialized; unwaypointed by auto navigation systems; away from it all.(Today's Boulder Highway, SR 12, wasn't even paved till 1985.)

That's how Escalante, a village of some 800 souls, seemed when my wife and I spent a long early-October weekend in this isolated land of sinuous sandstone canyons, flash floods and piney woodlands atop high plateaus.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

The following tour description is a sample from my guidebookCalifornia Coastal Byways,which I researched in a Toyota 4Runner, Toyota Land Cruiserand Lexus LX450.The guide details non-technical backcountry tours suitable to adventure motorcyclists and SUV-borne travelers. If you are unable to acquire a copy of the book at a reasonable price fromWilderness Pressor your favorite retailer, contact me atbackcountrybyways@gmail.com.

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Would you like a fuller sense of what it's like to explore America's loneliest shore? Read my magazine feature, Lost Coast Castaways, originally published in Road & Track magazine's spinoff, Open Road.

HIGHLIGHTSThis tortuous, historic little dirt road winds along high ridges amid a magical forest of redwood, Douglas fir, madrone, tanoak and ferns. The soaring King Range rises dramatically more than 4,000 feet less than 3 miles from the ocean. The site of historic Usal has a quaint wooden bridge and a gray-sand beach.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Selenium contamination traced to phosphate mines in one of America's greatest backcountry travel and recreation locales -- Greater Yellowstone -- is leading to profound deformities among trout in southeastern Idaho's mountain streams.The New York Times carried a story Feb. 23, 2012, that further exposed a study by J. R. Simplot Co. in support of easing standards for selenium contamination in Idaho streams. The study included photos of two-headed fish, a consequence of stream poisoning by Simplot's Smoky Mountain Mine.The mountains of southeastern Idaho, for decades the focus of reckless phosphate-mining operations, are among the American West's premier destinations for hunting, fishing, camping, hiking and adventure motoring. Of all the regions I've explored in my backroad travels, the wildlands of southeastern Idaho rank high among those in need of responsible stewardship.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Just as I put my ADV motorcycle away for the winter, I learned that a north-south backcountry travel route through the wildlands of Utah is now chronicled in a new map and teaser video.The recently developed, 871-mile Utah Backcountry Discovery Route (UTBDR) is the third trans-state adventure-motoring route in an anticipated network of linked routes through each Western state.

The new UTBDR includes portions of famous Kokopelli's Trail.

The UTBDR crosses eastern Utah from the Arizona line southwest of Bluff to Bear Lake on the Idaho-Utah line, just west of the Wyoming line. Portions of the route are chronicled in my guide to Utah's adventure roads, Utah Byways.Butler Motorcycle Maps has just added a map of the UTBDR to its expanding catalog of references available to backroad explorers. Like its other durable, detailed and plastic-coated maps, it retails for $14.95. With a focus on the needs of adventure riders and drivers, I will review this and other Butler MC maps in an upcoming post.

Friday, September 30, 2011

Travelers who pass through the northern Rockies on the backroads that comprise the Great Divide Route (a.k.a., Continental Divide Route) can see an ominous effect of global warming: expanses of dead and dying trees, primarily conifers and aspens.

Entire forest ecosystems along Union Pass Road, for example, are being reduced to ghostly tracts of beetle-killed, tinder-dry trees that stand like graveyard headstones.

Global warming is damaging the wildlands we backcountry travelers expend so much time, money and resources to enjoy. Just look closely at the photos in the many CDR or other Rocky Mountain ride reports on Web forums like Adventure Rider. What can we do? I wish I knew; I suppose reconsidering the vehicles we drive would help. But first, we need to be aware of the problem.

To learn more, read this recent story in The New York Times, headlined "With the Deaths of Forests, a Loss of Key Climate Protectors."

The negative impacts of global warming are being seen in the vast wildland known as Greater Yellowstone, world-class adventuring country that includes parts of Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. A new study has taken a look at what's happening, and what is likely to happen as our children and grandchildren inherit our legacy.

Friday, August 26, 2011

With summer finally arrived in the northern Rockies, I packed up my Kawasaki KLR650 dual-sport motorcycle for four mid-August days of exploring and camping insouthwestern Montana. But to get there, I opted to ride throughYellowstone National Park in Wyoming, and visit the only dirt roads remaining in the park that are open to the public.

Toyota T-100 on Blacktail Plateau Rd

The first is six-mile, one-way Blacktail Plateau Drive Auto Trail, which, as so many roads do, generally follows the course of an old trail that Native Americans used long ago. But as the name suggests, this single-lane 2WD high-clearance road climbs gently onto a plateau that offers sweeping vistas into the rugged wilderness of the Absaroka Range.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

The following tour description is a sample from my guidebook Utah Byways, which I researched in a stock Toyota Land Cruiser and 4Runner.The 65-route guide details backcountry tours suitable to adventure motorcyclists, four-wheelers and SUV-borne travelers. For information about the book, contactWilderness Press@ 1-800-443-7227. ISBN 978-0-89997-424-4

LOCATIONThe Great Basin, west of Delta, north of U.S. 6/50 near the Nevada border. Google Map

HIGHLIGHTSThese mountains are full of surprises. Marjum and Dome (or Death) Canyons are noted for high, terraced walls and side canyons. The 4,000-foot-plus west side of 9,655-foot NotchPeak[N39°08.590′ W113°24.560′] is famous for its sheer, roughly 2,000-foot cliff. Hikers who climb to the summit are rewarded with a 360-degree panorama at the very brink of the cliff. Near the summit is a large stand of bristlecone pines, among the world’s oldest living things. Sinbad Overlook also provides top-of-the-world views. The gravel road through MarjumCanyon is a relic of the original unpaved U.S. 6/50, replaced by the paved highway in 1950.

Driving a 4Runner to Dome Pass

If you have the time, add the drive up to verdant AmasaValley, on SawtoothMountain. There you will find granite boulders and outcrops, aspen groves, creeks, meadows, and the vista from atop 9,290-foot PinePeak. The range’s dramatic uptilted west side has canyons worth exploring as well.